Sudan confiscates, shuts down newspapers again

New York, January 18, 2012--The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns Sudan's
routine use of newspaper closures as a means to censor critical reporting. Over
two weeks, the authorities have shut down and confiscated the assets of two daily
newspapers.

"Khartoum has
consistently used newspaper confiscations and closures to silence critical
voices," said Mohamed Abdel Dayem, CPJ's Middle East and North Africa program
coordinator. "The government must immediately halt this practice of repression
and return all confiscated assets."

The National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS) shut
down the private daily Alwan on Friday, Reuters reported. Editor-in-Chief Hussein Khawjali toldthe news
agency that the NISS called and informed him of its decision to close the paper
and seize its assets. The decision came a day after the NISS raided the
newspaper's office and confiscated copies of its January 12 print run,
according to local news reports. Authorities did not provide a reason
for the closure, but Alwan had published several articles in support of
Hassan al-Turabi, the head of the opposition Popular Congress Party (PCP) which
publishes the daily Rai al-Shaab, which was shut down two weeks earlier.

On January 2, the NISS called Rai-al-Shaab
Editor-in-Chief Al-Tayib Ibrahim Issa to inform him of its decision to shut
down the newspaper and seize its property, international media reported.
NISS told Issa to inform his staff to
clear all personal belongings, Al-Jazeera
said. That action came a day after security forces raided Rai al-Shaab's
office and confiscated its January 1 print run, Al-Jazeera said.

Authorities did not provide Rai
al-Shaab with a reason for the closure, but the head of NISS told the local press
that the newspaper was being shut down for its lack of professionalism and
"violations" it had committed. Al-Turabi, once the justice minister and foreign
minister, is a leading critic of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir. He has spent
several years in prison or under house arrest. Rai al-Shaab, his party's
newspaper, has been a frequent target of censorship, CPJ research shows. It was previously shut
down and three of its journalists arrested in May 2010. The paper had
resumed publishing for only a few months before the latest closure.

In 2011, authorities carried out at
least 19 confiscations of newspaper print runs, CPJ research shows.
Despite the frequent actions taken against newspapers, Sudan continues to have
a vibrant independent print media.